NEWSletter July 2018
Issue 10 Highlights • AD Detector selected as 2017 Research Highlight • Optimization of Electron Cooling in ELENA • Timepix3 successfully used for antiproton detection • On the way to making antiprotons ‘cooler’
• Antimatter School held at CERN • AVA brochure now published • AVA Film tops EU’s playlist!
• Upcoming events
Dear friends of low energy antimatter and ion physics, I have just returned from our first international School on Antimatter Physics. Between 25-29 June, more than 60 students and lecturers joined this first AVA event that was open to the wider research community for a week-long series of lectures, seminars, tutorials and outreach events. The quality of the lectures was truly impressive and I would like to thank all lecturers for their contribution. You have done a fantastic job! The talk “Physique de l'antimatière” by Hubert Reeves was a particular highlight with all places in the Globe of Science and Innovation filled. I believe this gave an excellent message about our project and antimatter R&D in general. Registration for our first Topical Workshop on Detectors and Diagnostics is now open. This challenge-driven workshop will be hosted by CIVIDEC in Vienna between 15th - 17th October. The registration fee includes 2 nights of accommodation in Vienna, meals and social events. The workshop will focus on the current challenges in monitoring antimatter beams in storage rings, beamlines and experiments and will discuss the state-of-the-art, as well as further R&D needs. It is open to researchers from within and outside of the AVA project. I am delighted to see that our AVA Fellows already have contributed to first journal articles. Hot of the press, you will find an overview of some selected articles. They have also presented their initial work at international conferences and in the form of posters at the AVA School at CERN. More papers are in preparation - watch this space! Finally, there is further exciting news about our AVA project video. The film was submitted to a competition of science short films (maximum 3 minutes duration) earlier this year. At the end, more than 300 films were submitted. I am absolutely thrilled to announce that our film “AVA - Nature (anti)matters” has been the most watched of all of them and now tops the EU’s official playlist. Congrats to our Fellows and partner Carbon Digital! Enjoy this issue of MIRROR. Prof. Carsten P. Welsch, Coordinator